Example sentences of "[pers pn] [adv prt] in [adj] " in BNC.

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1 They will be ready for November , before the government grant settlement arrives , and work will begin in the finance officer 's department paring them down in bilateral discussions .
2 My parents were the type of parents who always seemed faintly disappointed by whatever it was you did , as if you were constantly letting them down in small ways .
3 ‘ Simon 's filled me in in glorious detail . ’
4 If they can get me down in black and white at least I 'll have my say , ’ he said .
5 The English archers poured a deadly hail of arrows into the French troops , and the English men-at-arms finished them off in hand-to-hand combat .
6 Imagine that we , the human species , released one billion living spores into the Universe , sending them off in random directions .
7 But he is also an American and before he guns you down in cold blood , in the manner you so justly deserve I might add , I 'm sure he will see his way clear to giving you a dying request . ’
8 Look forward to seeing you over in head office sometime .
9 I did n't like being called a rowdie , but then I did n't exactly have the time or resources to sue for defamation , if that 's the legal terminology for someone who slags you off in public .
10 ‘ You 've caused me and my friends a lot of trouble and we are going to pay you back in full .
11 If not , simply leave them nearby , and the dog will probably pick them up in due course .
12 Where the eye often used to be bruised by hectic entrances and exits , Page now keeps his dancers on the stage , shifting them around in complex patterns or gathering them up in long architectural phrases .
13 Daly invents new words , breaks them up in provocative , punning ways ( as with the title ; and therapist becomes the-rapist ) and plays on obsolete meanings , as with glamour ( originally ‘ possessed of magical powers ’ ) , haggard ( connected with witchcraft ) and spinster ( one who spins a new thread ) .
14 You can often pick them up in second-hand bookshops .
15 Shannon , constantly mopping her feverish forehead , is , like the giant lizard tied up and thrashing under the floorboards , at the end of his rope , and the party of Texan school teachers he is leading on a ‘ tour of God 's world ’ are incensed about his having put them up in flea-bag hotels and fallen into bed with the teenage student they have brought along .
16 In fact I think you can probably still pick them up in antique shops and second hand shops and probably a lot of people have still got some .
17 She dressed them up in full nineteenth century bourgeois feminine regalia and had them flower arranging or idling by the mantelpiece as in ‘ Angela ’ .
18 An , you know yourself , I 've come every week here and set them up in different bits and pieces . ’
19 Those respondents who insisted on strict anonymity — to the extent of removing coding on the questionnaires and sending them back in plain brown envelopes — not surprisingly pointed to the anonymity factor as an attractive feature of headhunting when compared with in-house recruiting .
20 Let's put them back in safe place
21 When the above entry is printed out according to the SIL MANUSCRIPT ( MS ) programme it appears like this : Many people will find it preferable to type the words of their dictionary in alphabetical order so that the computer prints them out in alphabetical order without further programming .
22 He took big lungfuls of air and then let them out in great racking sobs that shook his whole body .
23 Get the notes typewritten using a new ribbon , or copy them out in black felt tip pen in large capital letters .
24 Gradually harden them off and set them out in late May or early June when nights are no longer frosty .
25 I even used numbers instead of writing them out in full verse .
26 they would , I mean we 've heard stories one of the , John one of the school drivers who 's an Indian , he could n't bel they bring them out in big large groups .
27 The beginner would be well advised to copy them out in open score with the necessary transpositions .
28 Always wash them out in cold water when water changing .
29 Where the eye often used to be bruised by hectic entrances and exits , Page now keeps his dancers on the stage , shifting them around in complex patterns or gathering them up in long architectural phrases .
30 One wolf-whistled stridently , the rest looked her over in insolent silence .
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